Interactive Transcript
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Here's a 52-year-old woman with right
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hip pain in which we combine analysis of
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sequences and pathology for labral assessment.
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We immediately have drilled down into
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the right hip with a small field of
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view with high-resolution imaging as
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opposed to bilateral scout imaging or
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bilateral imaging for overall symmetry.
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What's nice about this is the improved
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resolution and the fact that you don't
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have to go searching for a lot of other
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extraneous pathology outside of the hip,
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you're staying within the confines of the hip.
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We've got three similar but different sequences.
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On the far left is a PD SPIR.
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It is the detection sequence.
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It is also the sequence that
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does everything pretty well.
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It does labrum well.
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It does bone extremely well.
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It does soft tissues well.
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In fact, here's a soft tissue mass.
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And it does intra-articular well.
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In the center is an additive gradient echo
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sequence known as ADGE, MFFE, MEDIC, and MERGE.
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All of these terms coming
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from different vendors.
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It has very robust signal-to-noise
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properties, which allows for a small field
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of view, 3D thin section imaging with one
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or one-and-a-half millimeter sequences,
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and it does cartilage very, very well.
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It does not do bone marrow well at all.
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It's an articular emphasis, high-
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resolution sequence combined with 3D.
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On the right is another type of gradient
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echo, a non-additive simple gradient echo.
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This one, called balanced sarge, but it
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too has fairly robust signal to noise,
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is combined with 3D and is another very
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good to excellent cartilage sequence.
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This one has been combined with 3D.
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It is an excellent sequence when it is
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done along the long axis of the femur,
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the head, the neck, and the trochanteric
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region to assess labral pathology.
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In fact, it is a cardinal
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sequence for labral assessment.
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So three water-weighted images, a standard
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gradient echo with 3D and fat suppression,
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an additive gradient echo in the center with
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very robust signal to noise, both very good.
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fibrocartilage and hyaline cartilage sequences,
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and on the far left, the overall detection
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sequence to assess the presence of inflammation,
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water, and water-containing masses.
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Now let's talk about water for a minute.
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When water is pure, when water is unbound,
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it'll be very smooth and very bright on
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virtually every water-weighted pulsing sequence.
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When water is bound, it'll, it may
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not be as smooth and as bright,
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but it'll still be hyperintense.
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So this is an effusion in the inferior recess.
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On the other hand, there's swelling and
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irregularity along the supralateral capsule,
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lifting, stripping away the iliofemoral
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ligament from the underlying bone.
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But the most obvious sign is this:
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A soft tissue mass exhibiting
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water signal intensity that is
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consistent with a paralabral cyst.
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From a labral tear.
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How do we know?
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Because we're going to show you
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the labral tear in a moment.
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But here is a cardinal rule:
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Anytime you see a cyst or a pseudocyst,
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which this really is — a pseudocyst being
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water surrounded by fibrous tissue, not
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epithelium, around a ball and socket joint,
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it's almost always indicative of an underlying
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labral tear, even if you don't see it.
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How'd it get there?
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Diffusion or tracking of
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synovial fluid through the defect.
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These hip pseudocysts can be under the ligament,
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intra-articular cysts in the labrum, intralabral
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cysts, or through the ligament, as this one is.
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Let's scroll this image and see
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what else comes to the fore.
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Some signal intensity within the bone marrow,
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indicative of a penetrating class IV erosion
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secondary to advanced chondromalacia.
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We've already discussed that
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there is a capsular effusion.
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In the middle, we focus a little more
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heavily on the hyaline cartilage,
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which is diffusely thinned.
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The normal thickness being
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about three millimeters.
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There's also a little swelling
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of the ligamentum teres.
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Let's locate our labrum.
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Here it is.
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It should be tightly attached as a triangular
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structure to the supralateral acetabulum.
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It's not.
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It's floating freely.
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There's labral tissue that is detached
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and turned into a round, what I call,
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mushy, ill-defined, edematous structure.
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And there is your stripped capsule.
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This additive gradient echo,
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which does a great job for hyaline
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cartilage, also does a very good job
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for fibrocartilage.
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Let's scroll it.
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Anteriorly, still irregular, ill-defined
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signal intensity where normally a
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triangulated hypo intense structure should be.
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And then anteriorly we see more
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larger penetrating erosions into
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the anterior acetabular roof.
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Let's go back a bit.
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A through-and-through line between the
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triangulated labrum and the acetabulum.
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Yep, that's a tear.
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That's one way the fluid got
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there to create this cyst.
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Let's keep going back.
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Now the labrum looks a bit more normal.
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It's hypertrophied, but the triangle
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is attached to the acetabulum.
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And more, not unexpected, penetrating erosions.
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Now let's move over to the right side,
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where we have an axial oblique running
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along the long axis of the femur,
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head, neck, and trochanteric region.
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This is a standard label sequence.
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Let's start up high.
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We go all the way up to the top,
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and we see an erosion, a cystic
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erosion in the underlying bone.
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There it is right there in the roof, the
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anterosuperior roof of the acetabulum.
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There is our paralabral
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pseudocyst from our labral tear.
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Remember that the labrum is
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running over the top of the femur.
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So what you're seeing here is a linear area of
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hypointensity represents labrocapsular tissue.
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Now let's work our way down.
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As we move down, we see the labrum as a slit.
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A tear and the acetabulum.
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This tissue represents a portion of the ligament
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and capsule, and then more of the ligament.
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So these are recesses.
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A recess, a recess, labrum, tear.
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Let's track it.
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Labrum, tear, acetabulum,
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recess, capsule, ligament.
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Let's keep tracking.
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A well-defined small degenerated
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triangle, tear, acetabulum, capsule.
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Now I won't repeat it; I'll just have
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you look as I scroll my way down.
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The tear is still there.
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The tear is starting to close down.
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It's starting to close down.
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It has closed down.
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Hopefully, that helps give you some
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eye candy so you can learn to recognize
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the different areas of linear hyper
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intensity that are seen in the brain.
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in the anterior hip in a complex case
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with a labral tear so as not to confuse
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them with pathology, and vice versa.
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Let's move on, shall we?
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